『Baja California, Mexico Fishing Report Today』のカバーアート

Baja California, Mexico Fishing Report Today

Baja California, Mexico Fishing Report Today

著者: Inception Point AI
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Tune in to the "Baja California, Mexico Fishing Report Today" for your daily dose of fishing updates, expert advice, and the latest news from the world-class sportfishing waters of the Pacific Ocean and Sea of Cortez. Whether you're a seasoned angler or a fishing enthusiast, our podcast offers tips, weather conditions, and the best spots for a successful fishing trip. Stay informed with the freshest insights on Baja California's exceptional marine biodiversity—from massive marlin and yellowfin tuna to roosterfish and dorado—and make every fishing expedition a memorable one. For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com Get all your gear before you leave the dock https://amzn.to/3zF8GXk This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.Copyright 2026 Inception Point AI 旅行記・解説 日次 社会科学
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  • Baja Heat: Calicos, Yellowtail, and Dorado Heating Up from Ensenada to La Paz
    2026/06/11
    This is Artificial Lure with your Baja fishing report. Starting with conditions: along the Pacific side from Ensenada down past Punta Baja we’ve had a light marine layer early, burning off to clear skies by mid‑morning, with onshore breeze building to 10–15 knots in the afternoon. Air temps are sitting mid‑60s at dawn, pushing into the mid‑70s later. Water temps are generally in the high‑60s to low‑70s nearshore, a touch warmer around the offshore banks. Sunrise is right around 6 a.m., sunset just after 8 p.m., giving a nice long window to work that low light. Tide is running a predawn high dropping to a mid‑morning low, then a moderate afternoon flood – classic pattern that’s been turning fish on during the first push of outgoing and again on the late incoming. On the Sea of Cortez side, from Bahia de Los Angeles down toward La Paz, winds have been lighter in the mornings with a bit more afternoon chop as the thermal breeze fills in. The water is a degree or two warmer here, and that’s been key for the pelagics. Fish activity has been solid. Inshore along the Pacific kelp lines, anglers have been putting good numbers of **calico bass**, smaller **yellowtail**, and a mix of **barracuda** and **bonito** on the deck. Around Todos Santos and the nearby high spots, half‑day runs have been averaging limits or close on calicos with a few quality fish in the 4–6 pound class, plus a pick on 8–15 pound yellowtail. Surface iron and 4–5 inch swimbaits in sardine and mint patterns have been the ticket, especially when worked tight to boiler rocks on the falling tide. Farther south, off San Quintín and the local bancos, panga fleets have been scoring steady **yellowtail** and some early‑season **white seabass**. Most of the yellows have been school‑size 10–18 pounds, with the odd bigger model mixed in. Fly‑lined live sardines and mackerel are still king, but yo‑yo jigs in scrambled‑egg and blue/white are putting in work when the fish sound. Best bite has been mid‑morning when the current starts to lean. On the Cortez, the story is bait and birds. Around Bahia de Los Angeles, boats working the channel edges and island points have been hooking **yellowtail** and **leopard grouper**, mostly on live bait slow‑trolled or dropped on meter marks. Down around La Paz and the nearby seamounts, there’s been a nice pick of **dorado** and school‑size **tuna** when the water stays clean. Trolled feathers and small cedar plugs in purple/black and zucchini are drawing strikes, with live sardina or chunked bait sealing the deal when fish pop up but don’t want to commit. As for lures and bait, keep it simple and local. On the Pacific inshore, pack surface irons, 1–3 ounce metal jigs, and 4–6 inch swimbaits in bait‑style colors. On the Cortez, bring small trolling feathers, diving plugs, and fluorocarbon leaders; then load up on whatever live bait the pangeros are selling at the dock – sardinas, anchoveta, or mackerel. Live bait on light wire hooks has outfished dead bait most days, but a well‑presented strip of fresh bonito will still get chewed. A couple of hotspots to circle on your chart: First, **San Quintín Bay and the outer reefs** – classic Baja mix of inshore and near‑offshore structure, with calico, sand bass, rockfish, and yellowtail all within a short run when the wind cooperates. Second, the islands and points around **Bahia de Los Angeles** – current edges and rocky points there have been steady for yellowtail and grouper, especially on the change of tide. That’s your Baja rundown from Artificial Lure. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Baja Fishing Report: Marlin, Tuna, and Roosters in Perfect Spring Conditions
    2026/06/06
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baja fishing rundown. We woke up to a light west breeze and mostly clear skies up and down the peninsula, with a weak early swell and comfortable temps on the water. Around Cabo and the Pacific side, it’s been a cool, gray dawn that burns off fast, while the Sea of Cortez side from La Paz to Loreto has been glassy first thing, then choppy with the afternoon wind line. Tides are running moderate: a good predawn high sliding toward a late‑morning drop, then a decent afternoon push. That first high has been the magic window—boats leaving in the dark and getting bit right as color shows in the east. Sunrise is landing just after 6 a.m. down here, sunset near 8 p.m., so you’ve got a nice, long light cycle to work with. Off **Cabo San Lucas**, the 1150 and 95 spots have kicked out striped marlin and a few early yellowfin. Most fish are coming on trolled ballyhoo and small lures in purple/black and petrolero colors. The local captains are also slow‑trolling live caballito on the temperature breaks and picking at the marlin steadily, plus a few dorado sliding in on floating debris. On the **Gordo Banks** and Iman, the panga fleet has been into solid yellowfin tuna—nothing huge, mostly school‑grade 15–40 pounds—with a couple bigger models mixed in. Best bite has been on live sardinas fly‑lined on 30–40‑pound fluoro, with a flourocarbon leader making a big difference in that clear water. Some boats chumming cut squid are also getting picked up. Bring smaller hooks; the bite has been a little finicky. Inshore from **San José del Cabo up toward Los Frailes**, roosterfish are cruising the beaches. Guys tossing live mullet tight to the sand are seeing quality gallos, and a few are smashing big surface plugs. If you’re working artificials, big white or bone‑colored stickbaits and poppers pulled fast along the drop‑off are the ticket. Mixed in are jack crevalle and the odd pargo when you get your bait a little deeper around the rocks. Around **La Paz**, both the bay and the offshore seamounts have been steady. The local pangueros are putting clients on dorado under birds and around sargassum; small skirted lures in blue/white and live sardinas are doing damage. There have also been amberjack and big cabrilla on the high spots for folks willing to yo‑yo heavy jigs—think 200‑gram knife jigs in blue chrome or scrambled egg, fished right on the bottom with stout tackle. Farther north near **Loreto**, the early‑season yellowtail bite is tapering but still hanging on the deeper rocks. Live mackerel on dropper loops and 6–8 ounce sinkers are still producing, especially on that morning down‑slope tide. Plenty of bonito and barracuda around to keep rods bent when the yellows get picky. For bait, live sardina and caballito continue to be king offshore, mullet for the beach roosters, and squid strips as a backup when the live stuff is scarce. On the artificial side, pack: - Small‑to‑medium trolling lures in purple/black, petrolero, and blue/white for marlin, tuna, and dorado. - Surface poppers and stickbaits in natural baitfish colors for roosters and jacks. - Heavy jigs and 4–6 inch glow or sardine‑pattern soft plastics for bottom fish and deeper structure. If you’re looking for **hot spots** right now, put your money on: - The **Gordo Banks** outside San José del Cabo for tuna and the chance at a few billfish. - The stretch from **La Ribera to Los Frailes**, tight to the beach, for roosterfish and mixed inshore action. That’s the word from the Baja coast. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
  • Baja Fishing Report: Summer Heat Brings Marlin, Tuna, and Roosterfish Action
    2026/06/22
    Name’s Artificial Lure, checking in with your Baja fishing report. Up and down the peninsula, conditions are lining up nicely. Along the Pacific side from Ensenada to Punta Baja, we’ve had a gentle west swell and light morning winds, with a bit more breeze filling in by mid‑afternoon. Skies have been mostly clear to partly cloudy, and the marine layer has been burning off early, so you’re getting good sun on the water once the morning fog lifts. On the Sea of Cortez side—Loreto, La Paz, down to Cabo Pulmo—seas have been relatively calm early with a bit of chop as the day goes on, water temps pushing into that warm, blue summer range that really kicks pelagics into gear. Tides around much of Baja today are running on a moderate swing: softer movement in the early morning, building into a healthier push through late morning and again toward sunset. That late morning and late afternoon window has been the sweet spot, especially around structure and current edges. First light and last light remain prime, with sunrise and sunset giving you those classic low‑angle light conditions when the bigger fish feel bold and slide shallower. Offshore out of Cabo and San José del Cabo, anglers have been into solid striped marlin, with a few blue marlin sniffing around the deeper temp breaks. Yellowfin tuna schools are roaming outside the banks; the grade has been mixed, footballs to mid‑grade fish, with the better ones coming on slow‑trolled live baits and well‑placed chunks. Dorado are finally showing more consistently on the warmer, cleaner breaks and around floating debris and sargassum lines, with a decent pick of gaff‑size fish. Best lures offshore have been classic skirted trolling heads in bright green‑yellow, purple‑black, and petrolero patterns, pulled at a moderate pace. Cedar plugs and small feathers in blue‑white and zucchini have been producing tuna and dorado when you slide in near bird life. Live caballito, sardina, and mackerel remain king—slow‑trolled or fly‑lined back into breezers and under bird schools. On the Sea of Cortez side near La Paz and Loreto, boats are getting a nice mix of dorado, a few wahoo on the edges, and some solid roosterfish cruising the beaches. Roosters have been hammering big live baits slow‑trolled tight to the sand, plus surface poppers and stickbaits in bone, white, and mullet patterns worked fast with a bit of pause. Light to medium spinning gear with 40–60 lb leader is the ticket there; these pez gallo are mean and love to dog you in the shore break. Inshore and nearshore, from Todos Santos down around the Pacific points, there’s been steady action on yellowtail, cabrilla, and jacks hanging tight to reefs, points, and high‑relief structure. Iron has been the star: yo‑yo and surface jigs in scrambled egg, blue‑white, and mint, dropped to the marks and ripped back fast. Live mackerel and sardina on dropper loops or fly‑lined near the surface have been producing the heavier models. For bottom dwellers—snapper and grouper—fish cut bait, squid, or live baits right on the stones; stay patient and be ready to winch hard. If you’re looking for a couple of hot spots right now: – Offshore banks like Gordo Banks and the 1150 outside San José del Cabo are holding marlin, tuna, and dorado when you find the right water color and temp line. – On the Sea of Cortez side, the areas off Punta Arenas and around Isla Cerralvo are producing dorado, wahoo, and some quality roosterfish, especially on days with decent current and bait present. Work those tide changes, watch the bird life, and don’t be afraid to adjust depth and lure size until you connect. Baja is in that pattern where every day can hand you a surprise if you stay flexible and keep an eye on the water instead of the clock. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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    4 分
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